Yangzhou, the first word of Shuidiao song, rhymes with Yang Jiweng and Zhou Xianxian. The sunset is full of dust, and Hu rides in the clear autumn. Han Jiaqun practiced 100,000, and the boat went up the stairs. Who throws a whip to fly across, recalls the past and licks the blood. The season is young and the horse is mink hair.
Every word in poetry is deeply rooted in the hearts of the people. Second, the southeast scenery, ten thousand volumes of poetry books, try to ask you. Don't shoot the south mountain tiger, just seek to enrich the people. The last film pursues the "past" with historical allusions. The first two sentences are written from the time when the gold master launched the southward invasion, "the setting sun fills the dust, and Hu rides and hunts in the clear autumn", creating an atmosphere of war. It is written that the dust of war is everywhere, covering the sun, and the ethnic minorities in the north often invade the south in the crisp autumn season, which is the normal state at that time.
The exciting thing about poetry is that everyone likes to hum all the time. If the first two sentences are written about the enemy, then the next sentence is written about us: "The Han family trained 100 thousand troops and went up the stairs." Our army is ready, with great momentum and confidence to win! After the comparison between the enemy and ourselves, I used three allusions in succession: First, I wrote that Fu Jian of the former Qin Dynasty had made wild remarks when he invaded the south, saying that "throwing a whip at the river with my soldiers was enough to cut off its flow." However, contrary to expectations, it turned out to be a victory.
Xin Qiji uses these three famous historical allusions here to show the result of Yan Yanliang's invasion to the south, which coincides with history. Using these allusions skillfully is both appropriate and natural. So folk people like this word, and everyone will hum it.